Archive for December 2013

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[ecrea] CALL FOR PAPERS: Radical Readings/Radical Texts: Politics, Spectatorship, and the Moving Image

Mon Dec 16 23:15:17 GMT 2013



Please note that we have extended the deadline for abstracts to be submitted for the Radical Readings/Radical Texts symposium taking place at Canterbury Christ Church University on March 15th 2014. The new deadline for submissions is Monday 13th January 2014.

Please find full details for the symposium below:
*
CALL FOR PAPERS: Radical Readings/Radical Texts: Politics, Spectatorship, and the Moving Image*
*CANTERBURY CHRIST CHURCH UNIVERSITY*
*Canterbury, Kent, UK*
*Saturday 15 **^th **March 2014*

This one-day symposium for researchers interested in the study of the moving image aims to explore the interdisciplinary notions of radical politics and spectatorship.

As new media forms create new distinctions and types of audiences, and as traditional and digital forms merge, there is a need for a new era of study of the political implications of the spectatorship of the moving image. This symposium will examine how texts or forms engage with politics, either in direct ways within the texts, or in the gaps between each medium and its audience. How does a text reveal itself politically? Does it draw attention to its political stance, or is this deliberately obscured?

We invite proposals for 20-minute presentations from academics and early career researchers across arts and humanities, welcoming papers that investigate politics and spectatorship that can be studied through a variety of methods. Possible subjects include, but are not limited to:

   * The relationship between political texts and audiences
   * Casting and/or characterisation – who is cast in specific roles
     and what the implications might be
   * Types of audiences: national, transnational, community etc., and
     how they are addressed or involved within the text
   * Issues of representation
   * The merging of the ‘home movie’ and professional film,
     ‘pro-sumer’, amateur filmmaking – the democratising effects
   * Textual analysis of specific scenes, films, programmes, moving
     image texts, including video games
   * Audience engagement and interpretation of media

Please send abstracts (200 words) and a short biographical note to (james.newton /at/ canterbury.ac.uk) <mailto:(james.newton /at/ canterbury.ac.uk)>

With any queries, please feel free to contact us at the same e-mail address.



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